SC: For Granting Environmental Clearance, Valid DSR a Mandatory Prerequisite  ||  NCLAT: Under IBC there is No Provision Mandating RP to Share Valuation Report  ||  NCLAT: NCLT/NCLAT Cannot Adjudicate Employment Contract Disputes Under IBC  ||  NCLAT: Can’t Reject App. for Approval of RP Solely on Basis of Withdrawal of Consent by CoC Members  ||  J&K HC: S. 37 of NDPS Act Comes Into Play When Bail of Accused is Being Considered on Merits  ||  Delhi HC: In National Capital, Permission for Felling of More Trees to be Supervised by CEC  ||  Registrar General of P&H HC Warns of Contempt in Case of Recording of Court Proceedings  ||  SC: States to Identify Laws Discriminating Against Persons Affected with Leprosy  ||  SC: Recommendations Made by SC Collegium for Judge Appointments to be Cleared Expeditiously  ||  SC: Where Serviceman Discharged from duty by Authority Onus of Proving Disability Lies on Authority    

Tholo Energy Services CC vs. Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service - (06 Aug 2024)

To claim a refund of the fuel and RAF levy, a licensed distributor of fuel must obtain the fuel directly from stocks of a licensed warehouse (not a depot)

Customs

The Appellant is a licensed distributor of fuel (LDF). In March 2017, it submitted the refund related to 25 consignments of diesel exported to Lesotho. The Appellant bought and collected the fuel from depots of the Petroleum Oil and Gas Corporation of South Africa (SOC) Ltd (PetroSA). The fuel was not transported to Lesotho by a licensed remover of goods as required by the Act.

The Commissioner disallowed the refund claims, essentially on the grounds that the fuel was not obtained from stocks of the licensee of a customs and manufacturing warehouse (a refinery), also known as a ‘VM’; that the fuel was not wholly and directly removed from a VM to Lesotho; and that the fuel had been exported without an International Trade Administration Commission (ITAC) permit, required in terms of the International Trade Administration Act, 2002 (the determination). The appellant appealed the determination to an internal appeal committee of the South African Revenue Service, which dismissed its appeal. The Appellant then appealed to the High Court, without success.

An appeal under section 47(9)(e) of the Act is an appeal in the wide sense, involving a complete rehearing and determination of the merits of the matter. Consequently, and contrary to the appellant’s submissions, the High Court was entitled to decide the appeal on additional grounds advanced by the Commissioner for the rejection of the refund claims. The High Court had correctly dismissed the appeal. In terms of section 64F of the Act, its rules and the requirements of Schedule 6, to claim a refund of the fuel and RAF levy, a LDF must obtain the fuel directly from stocks of a licensed warehouse (not a depot), and produce an invoice from the licensee of the VM to the LDF.

The Appellant obtained the fuel from unlicensed depots of PetroSA. The Appellant also exported the fuel without an ITAC permit. The Appellant also did not qualify for a refund on the additional grounds advanced by the Commissioner. It failed to show that the fuel had been manufactured in South Africa. The fuel was not removed from a storage tank at a licensed warehouse. It was not wholly and directly removed from a VM to Lesotho. The fuel was not transported by a licensed remover of goods as required by section 64D of the Act, and it was not delivered by a LDF in Lesotho in terms of Schedule 6 to the Act. Appeal dismissed.

Tags :   PERMIT  REFUND CLAIM  ELIGIBILITY

Share :        

Disclaimer | Copyright 2025 - All Rights Reserved